The small community of Fox Glacier has become a "ghost town"
in the wake of Saturday's devastating crash, says a local
accommodation provider.
Five locals and four tourists died in the fiery Skydive NZ
plane crash, the cause of which might not be known for at
least a year.
A bed and breakfast owner, who declined to be named, said
residents were still in shock and the streets were deserted.
"It's like a ghost town at the moment. I think everybody is
just quietly grieving. It's a bit of a shocker, mate," she
said.
However, Fox Glacier was a "tight-knit" community that would
rally together and life would go on, she said.
"It's an accident that's happened with a very large number of
people, considering the population here... it's a very big
disaster."
The adventure tourism industry would probably take a hit
initially as the crash might make some adventure seekers
"think twice" about visiting the town.
The town's core adventure activities were restricted to
skydiving, glacier guiding and heli-hiking, she said.
A lot of residents had friends and family affected by
Christchurch's earthquake, which made things even more
difficult.
A Franz Josef hotel manager, Marie Goodall, said it had
already had four cancellations since Saturday. However, she
put that down to the impact of the earthquake as it had made
international headlines.
Both Franz Josef and Fox Glacier relied on tourism and
businesses would be forced to close if tourist numbers fell.
Tourism West Coast general manager Matt Ewen said the crash
was an "absolute tragedy" and the small community had been
hit hard.
He knew of a hotel manager who had already organised
counselling for his staff, who were "gutted".
Skydiving was one of Fox Glacier's key tourist activities in
a town reliant on tourism, he said.
SkyDive NZ had been a very good business which had held an
"outstanding" safety record.
The crash was New Zealand's worst aviation disaster in 17
years.
The victims were Skydive director Rodney Miller, 55, from
Greymouth; pilot Chaminda Senadhira, 33, from Queenstown; and
dive masters Adam Bennett, 47, from Australia but living in
Motueka; Michael Suter, 32, from New Plymouth; Christopher
McDonald, 62, from Mapua; and Rodney Miller, 55, from
Greymouth.
The four tourists who died were Patrick Byrne, 26, from
County Wexford, Ireland; Glen Bourke, 18, from Coburg in
Victoria, Australia; Annita Kirsten, 23, from Germany; and
Brad Coker, 24, from Farnborough, England.
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